@Article{info:doi/10.2196/jmir.1252,
author="Scherr, Daniel
and Kastner, Peter
and Kollmann, Alexander
and Hallas, Andreas
and Auer, Johann
and Krappinger, Heinz
and Schuchlenz, Herwig
and Stark, Gerhard
and Grander, Wilhelm
and Jakl, Gabriele
and Schreier, Guenter
and Fruhwald, M. Friedrich
and ",
title="Effect of Home-Based Telemonitoring Using Mobile Phone Technology on the Outcome of Heart Failure Patients After an Episode of Acute Decompensation: Randomized Controlled Trial",
journal="J Med Internet Res",
year="2009",
month="Aug",
day="17",
volume="11",
number="3",
pages="e34",
keywords="Heart failure",
keywords="telemedicine",
keywords="mobile phone",
keywords="eHealth",
abstract="Background: Telemonitoring of patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) is an emerging concept to detect early warning signs of impending acute decompensation in order to prevent hospitalization. Objective: The goal of the MOBIle TELemonitoring in Heart Failure Patients Study (MOBITEL) was to evaluate the impact of home-based telemonitoring using Internet and mobile phone technology on the outcome of heart failure patients after an episode of acute decompensation. Methods: Patients were randomly allocated to pharmacological treatment (control group) or to pharmacological treatment with telemedical surveillance for 6 months (tele group). Patients randomized into the tele group were equipped with mobile phone--based patient terminals for data acquisition and data transmission to the monitoring center. Study physicians had continuous access to the data via a secure Web portal. If transmitted values went outside individually adjustable borders, study physicians were sent an email alert. Primary endpoint was hospitalization for worsening CHF or death from cardiovascular cause. Results: The study was stopped after randomization of 120 patients (85 male, 35 female); median age was 66 years (IQR 62-72). The control group comprised 54 patients (39 male, 15 female) with a median age of 67 years (IQR 61-72), and the tele group included 54 patients (40 male, 14 female) with a median age of 65 years (IQR 62-72). There was no significant difference between groups with regard to baseline characteristics. Twelve tele group patients were unable to begin data transmission due to the inability of these patients to properly operate the mobile phone (``never beginners''). Four patients did not finish the study due to personal reasons. Intention-to-treat analysis at study end indicated that 18 control group patients (33\%) reached the primary endpoint (1 death, 17 hospitalizations), compared with 11 tele group patients (17\%, 0 deaths, 11 hospitalizations; relative risk reduction 50\%, 95\% CI 3-74\%, P = .06). Per-protocol analysis revealed that 15\% of tele group patients (0 deaths, 8 hospitalizations) reached the primary endpoint (relative risk reduction 54\%, 95\% CI 7-79\%, P= .04). NYHA class improved by one class in tele group patients only (P< .001). Tele group patients who were hospitalized for worsening heart failure during the study had a significantly shorter length of stay (median 6.5 days, IQR 5.5-8.3) compared with control group patients (median 10.0 days, IQR 7.0-13.0; P= .04). The event rate of never beginners was not higher than the event rate of control group patients. Conclusions: Telemonitoring using mobile phones as patient terminals has the potential to reduce frequency and duration of heart failure hospitalizations. Providing elderly patients with an adequate user interface for daily data acquisition remains a challenging component of such a concept. ",
doi="10.2196/jmir.1252",
url="http://www.jmir.org/2009/3/e34/",
url="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19687005"
}